4.5 Article

The impact of soil erosion on soil-related ecosystem services: development and testing a scenario-based assessment approach

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL MONITORING AND ASSESSMENT
Volume 193, Issue SUPPL 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10661-020-08814-0

Keywords

Water erosion; CICES; Soil natural capital; Landscape; Control of erosion rates; Soil retention

Funding

  1. Lower Saxonian State Authority forMining, Energy and Geology / Landesamt fur Bergbau, Energie und Geologie (LBEG)

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This study presents a scenario-based approach for assessing the impact of soil erosion on soil-related ecosystem services in agricultural landscapes, highlighting the importance of sustainable soil management. The scenarios tested in Northern Germany showed a large mitigated reduction in potential service supply for crop provision, water filtration, and water flow regulation, emphasizing the need for sustainable soil management practices.
The ecosystem service (ES) approach usually addresses soil erosion as the regulating service control of erosion rates or soil retention. In addition to the assessment of this regulating ES, mitigated impacts on soil-related ES by preventing soil erosion can be assessed. This study presents a scenario-based approach for the assessment of the impact of soil erosion on soil-related ES. The assessment approach was tested in agricultural landscapes in Northern Germany, combining mapping and assessment of soil-related ES. In six scenarios, the degradation of soils due to soil erosion was simulated by the calculation of soil profile reductions. The scenarios represent two levels of impact with three time steps (+50, +100, +150 years). In the scenarios for the structural impact, the potential soil erosion rates were extrapolated into the future to generate spatially explicit information on degraded soils. In the scenarios for the mitigated impact, the actual soil erosion rates were extrapolated. Four soil-related ES were assessed for the initial state and the scenarios crop provision, water filtration, water flow regulation and fresh water provision. The comparison of the potential service supply of the four soil-related ES in the scenarios enabled the assessment of the long-term effect of the ES control of erosion rates. The mitigated reduction in the potential service supply for three of the considered ES (crop provision, water filtration, water flow regulation) is large and highlights the importance of sustainable soil management. Contrary to this, the ES fresh water provision benefits of erosion-induced soil profile reductions.

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